Literature DB >> 2939030

Asbestos and health in the Third World: the case of Brazil.

D M Berman.   

Abstract

Almost all of the asbestos used in Brazil is mined by an enterprise wholly owned by two European multinational companies, which also produce and market over two-thirds (by weight of asbestos) of the products made from asbestos. About 80 percent of the asbestos used in Brazil is finally consumed in the form of asbestos cement: for roof tiles and roofing panels, wall-board, and domestic and industrial water tanks. A survey of consumer literature and advertising printed by Eternit, S.A., and Brasilit, S.A., disclosed no mention of a potential danger from exposure to asbestos dust, and no recommendations for cutting down exposure to that dust. The situation at smaller, Brazilian-owned firms is reputed to be disastrous from the standpoint of workers' exposure to asbestos dust at the point of production. At a large asbestos-cement manufacturing plant owned by Eternit, however, exposure to asbestos dust (according to company records) seemed to be kept under 2.0 fibers per cc., the present standard for the United States.

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Year:  1986        PMID: 2939030     DOI: 10.2190/3TGT-UTUF-HNWR-GCPK

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Health Serv        ISSN: 0020-7314            Impact factor:   1.663


  4 in total

1.  Industrial workers' health and environmental pollution under the new international division of labor: the Taiwan experience.

Authors:  M S Chen; C L Huang
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1997-07       Impact factor: 9.308

2.  Cumulative asbestos exposure and mortality from asbestos related diseases in a pooled analysis of 21 asbestos cement cohorts in Italy.

Authors:  Ferdinando Luberto; Daniela Ferrante; Stefano Silvestri; Alessia Angelini; Francesco Cuccaro; Anna Maria Nannavecchia; Enrico Oddone; Massimo Vicentini; Francesco Barone-Adesi; Tiziana Cena; Dario Mirabelli; Lucia Mangone; Francesca Roncaglia; Orietta Sala; Simona Menegozzo; Roberta Pirastu; Danila Azzolina; Sara Tunesi; Elisabetta Chellini; Lucia Miligi; Patrizia Perticaroli; Aldo Pettinari; Vittoria Bressan; Enzo Merler; Paolo Girardi; Lucia Bisceglia; Alessandro Marinaccio; Stefania Massari; Corrado Magnani
Journal:  Environ Health       Date:  2019-08-07       Impact factor: 5.984

3.  Predicting Aedes aegypti infestation using landscape and thermal features.

Authors:  Camila Lorenz; Marcia C Castro; Patricia M P Trindade; Maurício L Nogueira; Mariana de Oliveira Lage; José A Quintanilha; Maisa C Parra; Margareth R Dibo; Eliane A Fávaro; Marluci M Guirado; Francisco Chiaravalloti-Neto
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-12-10       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 4.  Children's health in Latin America: the influence of environmental exposures.

Authors:  Amalia Laborde; Fernando Tomasina; Fabrizio Bianchi; Marie-Noel Bruné; Irena Buka; Pietro Comba; Lilian Corra; Liliana Cori; Christin Maria Duffert; Raul Harari; Ivano Iavarone; Melissa A McDiarmid; Kimberly A Gray; Peter D Sly; Agnes Soares; William A Suk; Philip J Landrigan
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  2014-12-05       Impact factor: 9.031

  4 in total

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